Sulfur Kβ non-resonant X-ray emission spectroscopy complements sulfur K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy in providing information on chemical speciation and electronic structure.
Sulfur K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy increasingly is used as a tool to provide speciation information about the sulfur chemical form in complex samples, with applications ranging from fossil fuels to soil science to health research. As part of an ongoing program of systematic investigations of the factors that affect the variability of sulfur K near-edge spectra, we have examined the X-ray absorption spectra of a series of organic symmetric disulfide compounds. We have used polarized sulfur K-edge spectra of single crystals of dibenzyl disulfide to confirm the assignments of the major transitions in the spectrum as 1s → (S-S)σ* and 1s → (S-C)σ*. We also have examined the solution spectra of an extended series of disulfides and show that the spectra change in a systematic and predictable manner with the nature of the external group.
Organic sulfides, sometimes called thioethers, are important in a variety of materials with diverse roles in biology and the environment. They also contribute a significant proportion of the sulfur in fossil fuels. We have studied a range of aliphatic sulfides using a combination of sulfur K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations. We show that the sulfur K-edge near-edge X-ray absorption spectra of aliphatic organic sulfides comprise two intense transitions in the near-edge spectrum, which can be assigned as 1s → (S-C)σ* and 1s → (S-C)π* transitions. These transitions are found to change in a systematic manner in sterically hindered sulfides composed of four-, five- and six-membered rings. Both the 1s → (S-C)σ* and 1s → (S-C)π* transitions are sensitive to the presence of strain in the C-S-C angle, shifting to lower values with more strained ring systems. Steric effects can give obtuse C-S-C angles, which are predicted to cause the two transitions to converge to the same energy and even cross over at very obtuse angles.
Thiophenes are the simplest aromatic sulfur-containing compounds; they are widespread in fossil fuels and a variety of natural products, and they have vital roles in determining characteristic aromas that are important in food chemistry. We used a combination of sulfur K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy and density functional theory to investigate the chemical bonding in the novel sulfur-containing heterocycle thiophene-2-thiol. We show that solutions of thiophene-2-thiol contain significant quantities of the thione tautomer, which may be the energetically preferred 5H-thiophene-2-thione or the more accessible 3H-thiophene-2-thione.
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